Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Offseason Snowboarding at Snowflex's Artificial Mountain

A friend and I were on a trip to Lynchburg, Virginia recently, when one of our friends got us free tickets to a year round ski and snowboard mountain called the Liberty Mountain Snowflex Centre. The "mountain" is made of a synthetic material that looks and feels like rigid carpet, developed in the UK by Briton Engineering Developments that allows riders to hone their skiing and snowboarding skills in and out of season. We were both skeptical as to how "carpet boarding" would treat us, but the results were an unexpectedly fun night of riding.

Liberty University is a non-profit institution kind enough to spend some extra funds on this little slice of imitation-wintery fun. The general public can enjoy the mountain for about $5-7 (per hour) for admission, and $12 equipment rentals.
The mountain itself is short, but littered with enough jumps, jibs, rails and whale tails to keep you entertained for hours. My personal favorite was the bomb drop into their jump section, with a sizable quarter pipe at the end. They even had a jump into a giant inflatable, but sadly it wasn't in use while we were there.

But how does it ride? Well, it rides a little better than icy snow. We could carve, but not too hard or we would slide out, which was our biggest problem (as the video below shows). A sprinkler system sprayed mist intermittently to help the ride, but that also made you slide out, too. The obstacles and features all rode well, and once you got over the fact that you were riding on glorified carpet, it was really fun. The other good thing is that there was about an inch of padding underneath the top layer, so falling didn't hurt so bad. (except for the occasional rug burn!)

If you can't wait until winter, I'd suggest dusting off the boards on your and heading for your nearest Snowflex mountain (find a list of locations here). It's no Breckenridge, but it'll do until winter blesses us with its first snow.